Pubdate: Wed, 19 Oct 2016 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2016 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Series: O Cannabis: Part Four of Six Series: http://news.nationalpost.com/features/o-cannabis Author: Denise Ryan Pages: A2-A3 THE FAME GAME Why the celebrity licensing model is not just the gold standard for a cannabis brand, it's a necessity Cedella Marley's voice has a comforting, familiar lilt, the sound of the Jamaican heritage she shares with her late father. Some 35 years after Bob Marley's death, the Marley family has moved into the cannabis business with Seattle-based Privateer Holdings to launch Marley Natural, a line of hemp body products, elegant black walnut accessories and smartly packaged smokeables. Their biggest target market? Canada - once the recreational market opens up. "We're very excited to bring Marley Natural to Canada," says Marley, who is on the phone from Miami. She adds a soft "Yeah, mon!" to her sentence like a punctuation mark. Bob Marley may be the most instantly recognizable name associated with cannabis, but he isn't the only celebrity hawking a marijuana brand. Celebrity licensing is the go-to model for cannabis marketers, who will have to negotiate a legislative quagmire around advertising and product outreach. Willie Nelson, Snoop Dogg, Nick Lachey, Whoopi Goldberg, Wiz Khalifa and Melissa Etheridge have all jumped into the cannabis business. Some, like Nelson, Snoop and Goldberg, have launched their own cannabis brands. And Bob Marley? He's no longer alive, but brand Bob Marley certainly is. Cedella Marley explains why the family chose Privateer to develop their cannabis line: "We have the same values: Social change, environmental sustainability, and to actually build a professional, responsible and legal cannabis industry." Professional, responsible, legal. Three calming words that point to a future that is far from its smokey past and the counterculture that made marijuana its love child. Back when Marley performed in packed, smoke-filled arenas, "the herb" came in plastic baggies. Rolling papers, roach clips, pipes and other paraphernalia came from a "head shop." Cleaning the weed was part necessity, part ritual - seeds separated from the weed like wheat from the chaff. Now, as the Canadian government prepares to become the first G7 nation to legalize recreational pot, and parts of the United States lean in the same direction, a sort of cultural cleaning ritual is also underway. While major investors pour money into grow facilities, distribution networks and product development, and celebrities sign licensing deals, marketing experts are ready to confiscate your baggie, perform a little smoke-and-mirrors trick, and hand back something that bears little resemblance to the marijuana of decades past. Olivia Mannix, founder of Canna-brand, a Colorado-based company specializing in cannabis product branding, says the pejorative stereotypes associated with pot smoking were their first target. "First, we take away any of the vernacular such as 'weed,' 'pot,' 'ganja.' In terms of imagery, we skew away from any green leaves or even the word marijuana." Conversations with Mannix and others already building the market are sprinkled with a distinct lexicon that signals this culture shift. In the new world order, as frappucino is to coffee, so cannabis will be to weed. Of course, if you've just smoked a bong full of some paranoia-inducing strain, you may see all of this as a vast corporate conspiracy to control not just what you smoke, vape or ingest, but how you feel about it. And you wouldn't be entirely wrong. For investors, however, it's not about getting high. It 's about getting rich. Brendan Kennedy, the CEO of Privateer Holdings, a Seattle-based private equity firm that raises capital and invests in the "cannabis space," brands are not going to emerge as a result of regulatory change, they are going to "fuel the cultural change." It's not "Be The Change" anymore; it's "Brand The Change." Several years ago, when Kennedy and his partners Michael Blue and Christian Groh decided to develop a private equity fund and invest in cannabis, investors were leery. "We set out on this old-fashioned, boots-on-the-ground adventure to go to places like northern California, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, British Columbia, Jamaica, Israel, Spain, the Netherlands, trying to understand the status of the cannabis industry," says Kennedy. By the end of their research, which included eight weeks in Canada interviewing everyone from medical cannabis patients to dispensary owners and politicians, they had developed a convincing thesis: Cannabis didn't have a popularity problem, but it still had an image problem. The argument they were able to bring investors was simple. "Cannabis is a mainstream product consumed by mainstream people around the world. Because of that, the end of prohibition is inevitable, and brands will shape the future of this industry." To address the image problem, Privateer, the brand, would look more Wall Street than Haight-Ashbury. "We set out to create our own brand at Privateer. We chose to wear suits. We weren't going to use the typical slang words and cliches. We weren't going to use the leaf all over the place or the colour green." It's also good for business to position yourself as something of an outsider to the product - perhaps it's a necessary qualifier when you are asking for someone's money. "I bought into the 'This Is Your Brain On Drugs' (campaign) and the egg cracking in the frying pan, and all the cliches embraced by the media on this product," says Kennedy of his teen years. In other words, Kennedy was no stoner. Privateer made three strategic brand acquisitions and boasts a portfolio that is as carefully curated as its own image. First, they picked up Leafly, an online cannabis resource with no revenue, but lots of reach. Next, they landed one of Canada's coveted medical cannabis licences. They opened a Nanaimo facility, which they branded "Tilray" - a name that is appropriately neutral, pharmaceutical-sounding. Privateer also landed the Marley deal, arguably the biggest fish in the cannabis branding sea. The celebrity licensing model is not just the gold standard for a cannabis brand, it's almost a necessity. Cannabis smokeables and psychoactive edibles can't be patented or trademarked in the U.S. because marijuana is still classified as a Schedule One drug, alongside heroin. By align your product with a high-profile celebrity (Leafs by Snoop, Willie Nelson's Willie's Reserve, or Marley Natural) and you can claim something that may be even more valuable: a kind of social patent. A celebrity with a massive social media following can neatly sidestep regulatory issues around advertising as well. An Instagram post or Tweet can reach residents of states, territories and countries where marijuana advertising is prohibited. Indeed, when Snoop Dogg signed on earlier this year to a deal with Tweed, a licensed medical cannabis operation in Smiths Falls, Ont., he tweeted out a picture of himself wearing a Tweed T-shirt. That picture reached his 14.3 million followers, not including re-tweets. Privateer's brand director Scott Lowry saw marijuana's image problem as a creative opportunity. Lowry had come from Heckler, the Seattle agency that did with coffee what Privateer needed for cannabis. Heckler created the Starbucks logo, and can claim some responsibility for creating an entirely new coffee culture. When Privateer approached Heckler, Lowry was skeptical, but Kennedy brought in enough research to make his case. "I remember leaving that meeting and thinking two things: One was, if these guys are right, this is probably the biggest opportunity we've seen come through Heckler's doors since Starbucks," said Lowry in a phone interview. It was also a huge branding challenge - and that made it fun. Lowry eventually left Heckler and joined Privateer as a partner. Like Kennedy, he is careful to couch his affiliation with cannabis by padding it with a context far removed from getting high. "It was my 72-year-old father-in-law who basically told me he was having some health issues, who was telling me cannabis was the best medicine he had," says Lowry. "This plant had been demonized for a long time. There were conceptions of the consumer that were fairly inaccurate. So for me from a branding perspective, coming into a situation where you really have some things working against you, and to see how you could really work in a marketplace that had these strong preconceptions," he explains, was very appealing. Lowry had to figure out how branding could lift cannabis out of the medical niche, fuel the cultural change that would make it as everyday as a Starbucks coffee, and attract real investors. Lowry used Honda's entry into the U.S. market as an example of how a market could open up simply by changing perceptions of the product and the user. "Honda came into the American market in the 1950s when motorcycles were associated with gang members and gearheads." The company launched a campaign with the tagline "You Meet the Nicest People on a Honda." The ads featured a mother with a child on a Honda, a boy and his dog, even Santa Claus riding a motorcycle. "Within four years, they had four times the dealerships that Harley did. To me, it was a really good example of the way a brand had changed the market," explains Lowry. He says their research shows a high interest among consumers for understanding of the product, its production, and how it will differ from its black market origins. The strategic challenge in pulling down old stereotypes and growing a new culture, one that is potentially as lucrative as the alcohol industry, is to show, as Honda did, the "nicest people," people like you and me. Their first print ad in the New York Times in August 2014 featured a jogger, ponytail bouncing, a businessman with a newspaper folded under his arm, and a tagline that neatly turned any preconception about cannabis on its head: "Just Say Know." No smoke, no bud, no bong - just people happily engaged in positive activities. Los Angeles-based optician Cheryl Shuman - dubbed the Martha Stewart of the Pot Com Boom - takes her branding message in a different direction entirely. Her Twitter avatar shows a glamorous blonde peering through a veil of smoke. Unlike the Privateer crew, Shuman is an unapologetic activist whose roots as a cannabis user are deep. Shuman, who divides her time between homes in L.A., Vancouver and Toronto, is up front about being an avid recreational and medical cannabis consumer. Once known as "the optician to the stars," Shuman counted Michael Jackson among her clients. She also had patients medicating their glaucoma with cannabis. "Back then, a couple of different celebrities were talking about (cannabis), but it was kind of like talking about being gay. I equate it very much to coming out of the closet." Shuman says she turned to cannabis after a doctor recommended she try it as a mood stabilizer. "I thought I was on Candid Camera," says Shuman, "but it saved my life. They had me on 80 mg of Prozac a day, five Xanax, a pill to go to sleep, another pill to wake up. I felt like a pillhead. Cannabis changed all that. Once I started using cannabis, my kids got their mom back. "So I started the Beverly Hills cannabis club. I was a Beverly Hills lady who used cannabis to save my own life and I didn't want to be demonized for it." Nor did she want to be associated with what she calls "that loser, stoner mentality." The best way to build credibility in the cannabis industry is through storytelling, believes Shuman. "The people who are really successful in the cannabis industry are people who have been touched personally by either not being able to get the plant to save someone's life, or being able to save someone's life by being involved with the plant." Charitable alliances are another way to build cannabis brands, says Shuman. "We have the financial capabilities to sponsor events to the tune of millions of dollars, to be the sponsor and open up that conversation and get people who have been using cannabis for medical reasons to get out and tell their stories. You don't have to be a celebrity to have a brand in this industry. In this industry, the people themselves are the heroes." Many of her consulting clients are in Canada, and she names our prime minister as one of her favourite cannabis-positive celebrities. "Justin Trudeau is God's gift to cannabis. Right now, Canada is the role model for the entire industry globally. Everyone is looking to Canada." Shuman, who says she has two cannabis-related reality TV series in development with Bravo, sees "healing" for communities that legalize the plant. "We are literally witnessing the beginning of the end of cannabis prohibition worldwide, and the healing of various nations and economies worldwide in terms of job creation and tax benefits." Cedella Marley also invokes the healing power of cannabis, with even more soothing words. "Daddy's message was unity, personal freedom and social justice. It is what he sang about, what he fought for, and how he lived. It's timeless, and it still resonates." Timeless, resonant, responsible, healing. Mainstream cannabis may be nothing more than marijuana in new packaging, but like a cup of Starbucks coffee, the delivery is easy. HOW TO TALK DOPE As reefer is being repositioned as less harmful, even medicinal, counting among its benefits the disempowering of organized crime and the increase of tax revenue, the re-codifying of the language we use around it is already underway. BEFORE Marijuana [mar-uh-wah-nuh] noun Definition: Common, but outdated pejorative term for cannabis. Usage: "When marijuana is smoked, it can have a narcotic effect." Dealer [dee-ler] noun Definition: Street supplier who sells or trades in marijuana. Example: "I'm going to see my dealer to pick up a bag of weed." Paraphernalia [par-uh-fer-neyl-yuh] noun Definition: Equipment or apparatus used with or necessary for smoking dope, ganja, weed, hash or oil. Usage: "The head shop is where I go to get my rolling papers, bongs, roach clips and other paraphernalia." Stoned [stohnd] adjective (slang) Definition: Intoxicated or under the effects of drugs, high. Usage: "After I smoked that doobie, I was really stoned." Hot knives [hot] [nahyvz] adjective/noun (slang) Definition: Knives heated to a high temperature to facilitate burning of hash or oil for inhalation. Usage: "We were doing hot knives and that's how I burned my lip." Pothead, Stoner [pot-hed] [ston-er] noun (slang) Definition: Frequent marijuana user, someone who likes to get baked. Usage: "That weird guy who lived in my basement was a real pothead." AFTER Cannabis [kan-uh-bis] noun Definition: Flower of the hemp plant. Usage: "This dinner party is BYOC, bring your own cannabis." Budtender [bud-tend-er] noun Definition: A dispensary expert who helps you select the cannabis that best meets your needs. Usage: "Hey, budtender, dabs for everyone, on me." Ancillary items [an-sil-uh-ree] noun Definition: Lifestyle items used in conjunction with cannabis, such as stash boxes, bongs and vape. Usage: "All of our ancillary items are child-resistant." Deepened perception [dee-puh nd] [per-sep-shuhn] Definition: The sensation experienced after vaping or ingesting cannabis edibles or smokeables. Usage: "I was in a state of deepened perception." Dab [dab] Definition: To dab is to inhale the vapours from a cannabis concentrate made using an oil extracted with butane. Usage: "Hot knives are so '80s. I prefer to dab without a rig." Enthusiast [en-thoo-zee-ast] noun Definition: A cannabis user who embraces a lifestyle of deepened perceptions and knows their indicas from their sativas. Usage: "She really knows her terpenes. She's a true enthusiast." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt